Szanowni Państwo,
w poniedziałek 22 kwietnia 2024 r. o godz 11.00 w sali 0.06 odbędzie się Konwersatorium im. Jerzego Pniewskiego i Leopolda Infelda Wydziału Fizyki UW. Wykład zatytułowany:
"Wetlands as essential and inevitable elements of the Earth System"
wygłosi:
dr hab. Wiktor Kotowski, prof. UW (Wydział Biologii Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego i Centrum Ochrony Mokradeł).
Wykład poświęcony będzie niedocenianej, a jednocześnie doniosłej roli, jaką mokradła, torfowiska i tereny podmokłe odgrywają w ekosystemie naszej planety. Wykładowca jest laureatem konkursu Popularyzator Nauki (2022). Założyciel Centrum Ochrony Mokradeł; powołany niedawno do Państwowej Rady Ochrony Przyrody.
Abstrakt wystąpienia znajduje się poniżej niniejszej wiadomości. Językiem wykładu będzie angielski.
Przed Konwersatorium, od godz. 10.30, zapraszamy na nieformalne dyskusje przy kawie i ciastkach w holu przed salą 0.06.
Terminy kolejnych Konwersatoriów w bieżącym semestrze to: 27 V i 10 VI.
Przesyłamy pozdrowienia,
Barbara Badełek, Jan Chwedeńczuk, Jan Kalinowski, Jan Suffczyński
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Dear Colleagues,
On Monday, April 22, at 11.00 AM, Jerzy Pniewski and Leopold Infeld Colloquium of the Faculty of Physics will be held in room 0.06. The lecture entitled:
"Wetlands as essential and inevitable elements of the Earth System"
will be delivered by:
dr hab. Wiktor Kotowski, prof. UW (Faculty of Biology, University of Warsaw and Wetland Conservation Centre).
The lecture will focus on the underestimated yet momentous role that wetlands, peatlands and bogs play in our planet's ecosystem. The lecturer is the winner of the Science Populariser (2022) competition. Founder of the Centre for Wetland Conservation; he was recently appointed to the State Council for Nature Conservation.
The abstract of the Colloquium can be found below this news item. The lecture will be delivered in English.
Prior to the Colloquium, from 10.30 AM, please join us for informal discussions over coffee and cakes in the lobby outside room 0.06.
The dates of the subsequent Colloquia are: 27 V and 10 VI.
With best regards,
Barbara Badełek, Jan Chwedeńczuk, Jan Kalinowski, Jan Suffczyński
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dr hab. Wiktor Kotowski, prof. UW (Faculty of Biology, University of Warsaw and Wetland Conservation Centre)
Wetlands as essential and inevitable elements of the Earth System
The role of wetlands, and especially peatlands, in biosphere processes and global ecological stability involves several global and regional mechanisms, which so-far have not been adequately synthesized and linked to Earth system science. In my lecture, I will argue that wetland ecosystems, especially peatlands, have been critically important to several major transformations in Earth's history and remain key mechanisms of the planetary homeostasis. I will present arguments that the evolution of this homeostasis, involving the interplay of feedbacks between the Earth's biotic and physical systems, as originally proposed by Lovelock and Margulis (1974), would not have been possible without the numerous processes occurring in wetlands, including the burial of organic carbon (responsible for the removal of atmospheric CO2 and the long-term increase in O2), the regulation of nitrogen and other nutrient cycling in landscapes and ‘riverscapes’, the maintenance of regional water cycling and hydrological regimes, the protection of permafrost in discontinuous permafrost zones, and several other processes. At the same time, these ecosystems, when disturbed, can shift to destabilizing functions, such as the rapid release of greenhouse gases (CO2 and methane [CH4]), nutrient emissions to surface waters, loss of water-holding capacity and catastrophic decline in biodiversity. Therefore, the protection of remaining mires and rewetting of drained peatlands is necessary in sustainable climate policies (mitigation and adaptation). Peatlands should also be key elements in predictions of the future developments of Earth system, including in post-apocalyptic scenarios following catastrophic climate change and hothouse Earth (their enormous potential of cooling and stabilising climate can be instrumental in long-term recovery).